Wow! Eye opening 😮 I was actually practicing the time boxing technique without knowing what it was called. Thanks for sharing! Keep making more life changing videos!
Hey Matt, great video! Do you have any tips for those that have an MBB offer but are waiting to start. Maybe some courses to prepare or books to read, as well as what the first few days and weeks look like? I don’t think there are many videos that fit this gap.
This is a great idea, I might do a "tips for incoming consultants" type of video. Honestly I would say don't worry too much about any reading or courses, alot of the job will be learned by doing. Something you can do ahead of time is network with people at your firm that are doing work that interests you - this will help with staffing down the line. The first few weeks will be orientation (at BCG this was 2 weeks of training), then most people got put on their first case right after. Hope this helps!
As a high schooler, just try to get into the best university you can (ideally ivies or top 20 US undergrad programs). If you’re interested in banking, apply to schools with undergrad business programs that feed into Wall Street like Wharton or NYU Stern. For Consulting the major doesn’t matter as much as long as you are at a target school. Once you get into a good college, then you should think about joining finance/consulting clubs and also getting relevant internships/networking with professionals. Hope this helps!
@@matthuang21 Great, thanks. I applied UVA (In-State) for Math Early Decision. Do you think I should shoot for the McIntire School of Commerce if accepted?
@@terrible2d It's absolutely worth a shot, if you don't get in you can still gun for IB/Consulting, you'll just need to self-study some of the technical concepts and be more proactive about networking.
Priming your mind for understanding is more important than scratching that non-contextual instant gratification itch that will never be applied. I'm mentioning this well after the fact, but wanted to say this for anyone else reading.
Wow! Eye opening 😮 I was actually practicing the time boxing technique without knowing what it was called. Thanks for sharing! Keep making more life changing videos!
Now I know how to manage my time,very helpful,thanks 👍👍👍
No problem 👍
Hey Matt, great video! Do you have any tips for those that have an MBB offer but are waiting to start. Maybe some courses to prepare or books to read, as well as what the first few days and weeks look like? I don’t think there are many videos that fit this gap.
This is a great idea, I might do a "tips for incoming consultants" type of video. Honestly I would say don't worry too much about any reading or courses, alot of the job will be learned by doing. Something you can do ahead of time is network with people at your firm that are doing work that interests you - this will help with staffing down the line. The first few weeks will be orientation (at BCG this was 2 weeks of training), then most people got put on their first case right after. Hope this helps!
Any tips for a high school student looking to getting into IB/Consulting?
As a high schooler, just try to get into the best university you can (ideally ivies or top 20 US undergrad programs). If you’re interested in banking, apply to schools with undergrad business programs that feed into Wall Street like Wharton or NYU Stern. For Consulting the major doesn’t matter as much as long as you are at a target school.
Once you get into a good college, then you should think about joining finance/consulting clubs and also getting relevant internships/networking with professionals. Hope this helps!
@@matthuang21 Great, thanks. I applied UVA (In-State) for Math Early Decision. Do you think I should shoot for the McIntire School of Commerce if accepted?
I want to meet you mate. When I fly to the US i will try to find you
@@terrible2d It's absolutely worth a shot, if you don't get in you can still gun for IB/Consulting, you'll just need to self-study some of the technical concepts and be more proactive about networking.
jesus almost 4 minutes of intro on a minute video?
For someone who cares about their time, you clearly took time out of your day to comment when you could have just exited the video… 😅
Priming your mind for understanding is more important than scratching that non-contextual instant gratification itch that will never be applied. I'm mentioning this well after the fact, but wanted to say this for anyone else reading.